Kochi
Well-Known Member
Does anyone have experience of the Southerly 110? Do the sail well? Would buy one?
Does anyone have experience of the Southerly 110? Do the sail well? Would buy one?
Does anyone have experience of the Southerly 110? Do the sail well? Would buy one?
Does anyone have experience of the Southerly 110? Do the sail well? Would buy one?
No problem! I am sure that Rob Humprey's would disagree with Mr Reed, I know I do and as a former owner I am qualified to actually comment! The 110 is a capable and safe boat and will look after her crew when the going gets tough, I had to sell mine when the recession took bite otherwise I would still have her now and be proud to do so. I will buy another Southerly in the next year or so and look forward to the day!
You're perfectly welcome to disagree - I merely answered the last 2 questions of the original poster and gave the reasons why I wouldn't buy one and how badly they sailed - nothing in your replies gives me any reason to change my opinion - the Southerleys sail slowly, especially down wind and I certainly would not consider owning one.
We should, perhaps, agree to disagree, especially as I'm a totally neutral and objective observer.
I suggest you verify your facts - t
Snip the Southerleys sail slowly, especially down wind and I certainly would not consider owning one Snip
You made a general comment about "Southerleys"
You're perfectly welcome to disagree - I merely answered the last 2 questions of the original poster and gave the reasons why I wouldn't buy one and how badly they sailed - nothing in your replies gives me any reason to change my opinion - the Southerleys sail slowly, especially down wind and I certainly would not consider owning one.
We should, perhaps, agree to disagree, especially as I'm a totally neutral and objective observer.
Light winds are not that great. However, 15Knots plus and the 110 really starts sailing. Came up from the Blackwater to Harwich several weeks ago running in F6/7 under genny alone with 7 knots minimum. Raising the keel gave me an extra knot. Yes, generally running under lighter winds are not a really strong point of sail.
A lot depends on what you want from a boat. The 110 lends itself to avoiding being tide bound in shallow estuaries and finding those 'special' anchorages which would otherwise have been impossible.
Its a very personal thing. The S110 has a Southerly trademark of having a great lower saloon when relaxing and harbour bound in inclement weather. Agreed that close quarters handling can be 'challenging' with the twin rudders - especially as one does not really like to rely on a bow thruster as heads pop up from companionways expecting the worst when they hear the grinding of the motors!
Eye wateringly expensive when compared to mass production boats, but less so when you look at some of the sturdy Scandinavian boats or alternatives such as Ovni.
If anyone wants a performance boat, the S110 is not for you. If you want a really safe cruising boat to let you explore shallow estuaries as well as having great stability in adverse conditions (even with the keel up), there is little competition.
Thank you again, it's good to hear from owners both past and present and to hear that you have positive views about the 110.
We have seen a very nice 110 for sale which would be ideal but it has in mast furling. Will this hinder it's performance? Should I look for one with slab reefing?
Does anyone have experience of the Southerly 110? Do the sail well? Would buy one?